Colliemom wrote:ACtually , those strap things are oil filter wrenches, used to remove oil filters from mechanical things like cars, tractors etc. I’ve used them before but never on the RV. Gonna try it after reading this. There is also a 90 degree elbow that screws into the trailers city water connection that you can then attach the hose too. Way easier that trying to screw hose to the connection itself and you don’t get a kinked hose either as it hangs straight down. Camping World or any RV store has them.
Liz wrote:
Extension added to bring connection to edge of RV as Beth mentioned.
JudyJB wrote:Someday, I would like to own a motorhome where I did not have to stick my head into a storage compartment to attach the sewer hose. Really. I assume that some long-armed engineer designed and tested the system, but my arms are not long, to say the least. So, I have to open the compartment door and latch it. Then, I have to bend over and stick my head into the compartment to reach where the sewer hose needs to connect.
Birdie wrote: I have a quick connect on the in house connector also.
OTW wrote:Liz wrote:
Extension added to bring connection to edge of RV as Beth mentioned.
Liz - Where do you get those extenders??? Can I leave it on all the time? My dump valve points outward, not downward so it probably wouldn't be any lower than the assembly is now, just closer to the edge of the trailer which would help me a LOT. (I looked for "rv dump valve extender" on Amazon and nothing like your photo showed up.
Liz wrote:OTW wrote:Liz wrote:
I got mine at TRiAm RV in Ocala, FL where I had my RV serviced, but they are definitely available at Camping World and probably wherever RV supplies are sold. Maybe even some Walmarts.
JudyJB wrote:My utility compartment has a door on it, so no extensions are possible. I do stick the hose up through the hole with one hand and grab it with the other. The positive of the door and a separate compartment is that I just stick the rinsed out sewer hose into the compartment--no having to deal with the rear bumper as storage, but the negative is that the hole in the bottom is the only way the hose can be attached. The connection comes down from the top of the compartment. I will have to take a photo of it. The compartment also has my electric cord in there and the plug I have to plug it into when I use the generator. I also store the sewer hose ramp or whatever you call it in there. It is a dirty place, so my water hoses and things like my outdoor stool, external water filter, and all the extra electric cords and connections live in the "clean" storage bin next to the utility cabinet.
And who designs these things? Tall men with long arms. Also, young men who can bend over to reach difficult things because they don't have arthritis or bad backs.
I once happened to be in a line at the Fleetwood factory parts building, waiting to get something or other. Behind me was a young Fleetwood engineer. I lit into him about how I had to hop up and down to reach the lights on my ceiling because I am short. He said in the less expensive motorhomes like mine, they assume people can use a small stool to reach ceiling lights, so they don't bother with wall switches. Grrrr. I asked him if his wife had to use a stool in their house to turn on lights. Ummm. Noooo. He had really never thought about that. I also asked him what children were supposed to do to turn on lights?? Wait for an adult to do it for them??
Part of this problem is that when we buy an RV, we seldom check to see how all the practical stuff operates. The salesman will point out the dinette and kitchen storage, and the large shower area, along with the comfortable sofa, and all the other inside decorator stuff. We only discover after we buy one that we have to be a contortionist to do some daily tasks.
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